HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1893-7-28, Page 71;
JULY 28, 180,
morawainessaswasassitssesssegassisamesseeseseweasselserawriessiel
AGRICULTURAL.
The Old Farm.
The clear ohs tarot 1 Ila Ovary rod
IoIraugght with ntonlnrieeslcrmt to 310!
Eaoej youso il(iho (1 gay end free,
Hero ;Q)Lure seems to ,.peak herself,
In WOW stroma, and sonny hold;
In thorn I li od conlpamiausllip
The orowdal ells- cannot yield.
What ore tie sitallowjoys to Ole,
Its pomp and show, Ile sordid wealth,
Olven In exchange for beaven'e on mote,
I'ol' bolndluss 1: oo(lom and rugged health ?
Lot hint who loves the sickly shade.
Behind the connfor writhe and bow;
To moil. somas n hotter thing
• To feel the sunlight on my brew.
And Lo the ono who falsely scorns
The mally.farnlor'e honest toll,
Degrading deems the ,work that gains
A living from the gonerolls soil :
i'd point 31130 to some f¢nlon9 name,
Our (meetry''s pride and glory 00w,
Of man whose ynnth did not disdain
To wield the axe or drive tllo plough,
But let the farmer know Ids worth,
Loft' and bold his ,mon si1ould be.
His will fall ctrwlc;, end cleat' his mind,
His duty and (phdons free.
Thus careful thought aro industry
Work wendare with the fertile cod,
Isis labors high approval win
From man, from conoolenee, and from God,
—1.1nnlo Taylor.
resembles the continually, but is only abeut
two•thirds the size; heal the peculiar habit
of settling upon the baso of the horn to
rot it 1101 reeeivcd the mane of horn thy,
Contrary to the popular 1 leaa, these
Hies do no Injury 10 tine horns 110r are t hey
directly the 001100 of the soros ofl011 seen
on the banks, for these ore produced by lite
anln.019 militant( against trees ail fonoos 311
vain attempts to ease their sufferings.
13y inserting their sharp, dagger -shaped
trunks through the skin and sucking the
blood, the Aloe cause such great 11011aton
that the animals qulokly fall off in bah
and milk. Tho eggs are never laid in these
three, as some 11(100 supposed, but in the
fresh droppings of the animals, whore the
maggots feed upon the liquid etibetan00 of
the dung.
At this early elaeol of the year, doubtless
the most successful prac1ic= will be to treat
the dung eo as to prevent their breeding.
Leave no manure lying around the yard,—
get it all under the ground as soon as pos-
sible, and then either spread out till the
fresh droppings 00 they will dry out, or
apply lime or wood ethos ; oven road duet
or dry earth will answer the purpose by
soaking up the moisture.
To protect the cattle from the mature in-
sect almost any cheap oil will answer, as
tri in oil, fish oil, tallow or axle grease.
Tho addition of a little carbolic acid oe oil
of tar not only keeps the flies away, but
elm has a healing effoot upon the soros.
Use in proportion of oce ounce (about a
tablespoonful) to a half gallon of oil ; rub a
small quantity on the parts where the flies
gather most thickly.
\\-hat is known as kerosene emulsion may
be sprayed on the animals. Take two
ounces of soap and boil in a quart of rain
water, turn into two quarts of coal oil,
ohurnlwith a force pump or stir for about
five minutes, 00 as to mix thoroughly, and
dilute with nine parts (twenty-seven quarts)
of water; apply with a force pump or
sponge.
Potato Inseots and Diseases.
Wo can apply the poisons dry, diluted or
with some cheap powder, as common land
plaster or atr'olacked limo, or we Gen apply
them with water, I have found the dry
method more satisfactory. Of course water
oasts less than lime or plaster, but the
trouble of using it is greater. While con-
nected with the experiment station in New
York, says Prof. 1C. S. Golf, 1 made a care-
ful series of tests to find out the smallest
amount of parrs green or London parple
that would answer. I tried one pound of
paris green to 100 pounds of plaster and
found that was gnito sttffioient. I next
tried one part to 150 and I found where
the mixture was perfect this was also
efficient. I next tried ono pound to
2J0, but found that with so great a dilution
some of the beetles would escape, and I
settled on the eonolu0ion that one part to
150 is about as small au amount of poison as
it is wise to use. An old barrel churn is a
good thing in which to mix the materials.
For apylying the powder I find nothing
so good as a hated sifter, a sort of pail made
of galvanized iron or tin with a porforeted
bottom, a rigid handle and a tight fitting
Dover. We simply have to give the pail a
shake over the plant to cover the foliage
with the mixture. A mar eau use two of
these pails at once, if he chooses, and thus
take two rows. 0f course this applies only
to those who have not a large area of petit -
thee. Where a man raises ten or twenty
acres he would, require some horse machin•
ery for distributing poisons. When applied
in water, I have found that one ounce of
the poison to ten gallons is 11 good proper.
tion,
THE BRUSSELS
PAST
rendition as readily off as on the trees, and
1411011 11110 elttm, of (101(8 is t0 be 08th to
lnm'kat, they cal be peeked before they
ars hilly tepeeod.
Sheep Experience.
The cost c•f pro,ltlolug a poll lid of wool
depends upon the eil'olllnalances. If we
rained no 101ths and the wool wee only pl'o•
duct it would emit in the neighborhood of
50 cents per pound. \\'ith well sclo3te(1
and well cared for stoat the wool will cost
nothing, The lambs aro the medium of
profit,
I koop 25 sheep, pure Cotswold; hays
sold 80038 years $300 from them; they sheer
12 to 14 pounds of wool per head. Lembo
are dropped in January and February;.
lambs 10 mon1h0 old will weigh 1110 pounds;
always keep in 0 warm shed; use fly powder
to kill the tick; feed two bushels ofonsilage
and hay twice 1a day; sell bunk lanb0 in
Juno at from 01 to $(i.—[William Gleason.
At 1t meeting of the 1Iassaohusetts board
of agriculture Mr. Avory of 13uokland said:
Feed u owe well from tiro time silo wont to
the barn, having her go into winter grouters
in good condition; with plenty of fine early.
hay and rower, that would bo all ho would
mare for until after lambing. Soon after
the lamb was dropped 11e would oonmonoe
to feed a little grain, the amount would de-
pend upon the quality of the hay. Ho
once fed a few ewes wh1011 had two lambs
00011—ho was fattening the owee as well as
the lambs for market—over two quarts per
day. 1t was linseed 80001, cottonseed meal
and provender—coin and oats ground to•
gother and mixed in equal parts,
Growing Celery.
Of all the vegetables We grow none have
grown in public favor and demand faster
than celery and none are receiving more at-
tention and care in cultivation. The seed for
the early Drop should be sown under glass in
April and transplanted once, the seed is very
slow to germinate and requires a great deal
of water ; if the weather should bo very
bright and warns the glass will need to be
covered with a mat during the (neat of the
day to prevent the eoil becoming hard and
crusty. Tho soil in the field should be very
highly maimed and made fine by thorough
working and the plants well watered when
set ; stir the soil often to kill the weeds
down and promote the growth of celery, and
draw no dirt to the plants till time to broach
it. There is a great diversity of opinion in
regard to the best varieties to bo erown. it
isn't possible to get something for nothing
in growing celery any more than it is in
short term endowment orders, When I have
had the best, says a grower, is has been be.
cause I fulfilled the rognirements for success
and when I have failed it has been my own
fault. To have well blesahed crisp celery
requires that the bleaching be done
at the proper time and in the proper
manner. It mast be bleached while
it is making good vigorous growth, 0 we
wait till it has nearly Mone growing and try
to bleach that old growth we shall fail to
get nice celery ; there are different methods
of bleaching but none I believe that is as good
as the soil in uvhlcll it grout's.
In all the hinds of vegetables there are a
great number of varieties, always get the
best but do not think they grow alone, that
you have only to get tho right variety to
emceed, It is very much as it was with the
man who always had better hogs than his
neighbors, and 1011011 asked what breed they
were, replier], " the swill pail breed."
We hear mach complaint about the poor
market and it is true there are a few weeks
in mid -summer that the demand isnot very
I>riak ; but it is seldom that we cannot sell
all we have at the market price and that
ought to satisfy all reasonable mortals. If
prices aro low at certain tlmiea they are high
at others, and until we conte a good deal
neater than at present to producing what is
used here, we ought not to grumble aeout
the market. When we consider the im-
mense quantities of potatoes, oobbeges and
other vegetables as well as truits and dairy
produots, that are annually shipped here,
itis evident to the most casual observer
that 11e can sell all he can produce. I most
thoroughly believe in special branches of
farming to meet the requirements of differ-
ent localities
and the and > b
dnllities of
the different farmers. Let each decide for
himself what his specialty shall be, and
having decided go. for that with "pesky
energy 1"
T1f13 POTATO 1)00.
The most common disease of potato is
what is known as the potato rot. This
disease always appears first upon the foliage
of the plant. Its life history ha0 been the
subject of much study and some dispute.
Doctors, however, agree that it lives from
one year to another from what are called
resting spores.
Those resting spores are formed in leaves
that have been destroyed by rho fungus,
and aleo in the decayed tubers. Iu wet
weather and on the wet soils these spores
mein a 001130ttun to germinate. Some are
deposited by the wind or other means on
the foliage of the ,plants, and being in
contact with a most surface, these very
minute spores germinate and send a
little ineeelium through the epidermis
of the loaf into the interior. The disease,
when on00 it has obtahl0(1 a foot-
hold, spreads under favorable conditions
with great rapidity, and one day is some-
times sufficient to blast a whole potato field
as if fire had passed through it. The spores
being formed on the leaves t re sot free and
fall to the ground nal the rains smolt them
down into the soil, where they come in
contact with tine tuber, and thus it is that
the potato rot begins.
Perhaps our host preventive measure is to
plant early ; this brings early maturity. The
disease always prevails worse in the latter
part. the season.
We eon do something
by thoroughly draining out softs, as the
• fungus is always worse In wet soils and sea.
eons, In order to lessen the chances of the
disease the following year we should burn
the tops of the diseased tubers.
By spraying the tops of the potates with
a mixture of sulphate of copper and lime,
what we call the bordeaux mixture, the rot
is considerably less on the area sprayed than
on that not sprayed.
ANOTITBS 01018A511 OF TI(E POTATO.
There is anct1100 disease of the potato
whioh appears in July or August as a blank
blight on the foliage, causing the tops to die
as if a fire 11a(I paeeed through the field.
This disease has not even been named. It
is being investigated, and WO shall probably
soon know more about it. Experiments
have shown the bordeaux mixture is a pre -
volitive of this blight.
now 110 11A1C0 110Rn11.111X 0300TII011.
I will now tell you how this bordeaux
mixture is made. I dissolve ale pounds of
sulphate copper (blue vitriol) in four gal-
lons of hot water, and in another vessel
slack four pounds of fresh lisle in four gal.
Ions of cold or warm water ; then when
the two 80l0ltons havedissolovod add them
together and dilate with water until the
whole makes 22 gallons, when it is ready
for use. We apply with a force pump or
any other apparatus for applying liquid
mixtures.
TITS POTATO 00110.
The potato scab is a disease with which
we are all familiar. There appears 1u be
several different causes for this trouble. It
seems that almost anything that corrodes
the surface of 1110 tuber hu the Boil will
cause the potato scab. It appears that the
planting of scabby send tends to increase
the disease.
The Horn Fly.
In answer to a gnestion asked by a sub-
soribor, we give the following description
of and remedies for this now enemy of the
rumor, which appeared 111 runty parts of
the country for the first time last season,
and has already bogtn•its ravages this sea,
son, Boomso of the rapid propagation of
its 0p8ones, only tatting two or three weeks
from the egg to the perfect insoot, farmar0
1111181 ctrl' tltemoolvee and 1110(00 up their
minds to tight it vigorously if they would
keep it in subjection.
Th 10, Hy, which is a nativo of Southern
Ihnopo, was mtlodueed into the United
Stotts abort 1Si30, and rapidly spread over
this continent. In appoaranoe 1t olosaly
A Wild Night on the Amason.
I looked down the precipice on the edge
of which we were hanging, and as 1110 un-
coiled hawser snapped like a rotten thread
the luuuoh was hurled bank into the churn-
ing waves. Ono minute we were threatened
with destruction in the mad whirl of a giant
sucking whirlpool, and the next saw us
spinning off nt a tangent to bring up against
a more terrifying wave, that seemed bent
on ending our career. But the Intrepid
rode the water like a ducts, and after every
assault of the flood bobbed up undaunted
for another eneotultee. Crouching in her
bottom, and baling the vrater, as MI=
01 er the gunwales in drenching spray or in
maasivo We 000 with Dur hats as well as
anything else we mould get hold of, we
wanted for the final toss whioh should end
our danger Dud send us bodily into the
flood, to be tossed about swollen and
bruised, the dead prey for myriads of (oath.
erect scavengers,
For more than five hours we were the
shuttlecock for this nn0nlac flood, which,as
it swept up•atrcan against the powerful
current of the mighty river, backed up the
descending waters until oven the highest
banks were flooded. The largest trees' fall
victims to the raging torrent, and the hall
banks Were washed away in such a planner
that later travellers scarcely knew tho riv-
er again.
Look ahead 1" Dried Franklin, Who kms
holding on to the wheel with a grip of
death. "For God's sake, pray, lads 1 The
end has cone t Look sharp 1 If we brave
this danger it will be by a miraole 1" and
there ahead of us, looming up out of the
middle of the river, rose a large island
whose sides were fully twenty feet high.
The mad torrent was malting straight for
this obstruction, and, while we were being
carried onward with tate rapidity of light.
ning, two of us managed to crawl aft to
Franklin's assistance. G'raspiegthe wheel,
we strained in united effort and succeeded
in holding the launch "head on" to the
flood.
Every eye was on the lookout for whatever
vantage sve could gain, and when Franklin
shouted to us in a voioo made hoarse by des.
poration, " Put her hard over nOW 1 With
me, boys, and perhaps we can escape," we
tugged and pulled until every chord in our
bodies seemed to be on the rook. A roar,
a weird horrible shriek, such as none of us
ever wanted to hear again, broke over the
1001011 of boiling waters,—a shriek of angry
defiance,—and the mad flood was hurled
back from the island, one•half on each side,
its force almost broken.
The conunand of oar w11oolnlan alone
saved ua, for with the parting waters we
shot into that side which washed over the
powerful channel of the river, and in an-
other moment we were swept down stream
With the rapidity of a streak of sunlight.
At first stern on, we were fortunately able
to swing our boat hoad'tn with the current in
short rt time,and from then n
0 had no trou-
ble to keeour 1000011 oleer of the 1110001'
ed collisions with trees and wreckage.—
[Morgan S. Edmunds, in July Lippincott's.
Summer Attraotions for His House.
SOME RELICS OY PIRATES'.
Mr. Le Martin Finds More Traces of the
Old Freebooters.
The Bathed ]hml801 910' Private Colima' of
:0Inlingasear--ontluwcd Eiiropoun0 Who
Weenie Itlllghl8 in n Savage country
The Fro ell traveller, Le Martin, who hos
just visited tho nest comet of Madagascar,
says that numerous trams are yet to be
found tlloro of the freebooters who made
that coast their haunt for 8o many years
early in the lust century, Some of the names
010115 that comet, such as Murderers' Bay,
perpetuate the memory of the pirates
Le Martin found on ti10 shores parts of
veesols which they had plundered, and bits
of their old forte, he says, are still scattered
along the ooaet, particularly at St. 11ary's
Island, where the fort built over 100 years
ago is still in a fair elate of preservation.
rho pirate colony in Madagascar was
founded iu the days when piracy thrived.
About a dozen of the most notorious out.
laws who had made the wast coast of Africa
a terror to merchantmen, transferred their
001ertwi000 to the east onset, They found
on the western shores of Madagascar favor.
able retreats 10 whioh they could retire iu
order to escape the men•of•war that were
trying to pat an and to this form of out.
lawry. Those pirates Were able to gain
great lnfluenco over the iakalava na•
tive0, who in the early pert of the last cen-
tury were not under the subjection of the
more advanced and powerful limas, as
they aro to -day. Tho entire island was in
a eavieg0 condition and the pirates with
their guns and cannons were able to estab-
lish their supremacy for over one hundred
mites along the weal coast. livery one of
the dozen pirate leaders became kinglets,
bringing all the chiefs under their rule, It
was their policy to incite rivalries and war-
fare among the native tribes and finally to
side with that party of belligerents who, in
their opinion, could be m0do moat useful
and submissive.
Some of the pirate chiefs owned many
slaves and supported enormous plantations
and hareno. While they were conquering
the western fringe of the big island they
'were elan preying upon all commerce that
ventured into the neighboring waters. In
1110 course of forty years hundreds of
merollantmen were attacked, their cargoes
captured, and all their crews killed unless
they consented to become part of the
pirate bands. Most of them, to save their
lives, if for no other reason, became pirates
themselves, and thus the force of outlaws
was greatly augmented.
Sometimes the chiefs would send vessels
rigged out as respectable trading craft
to Europe to replenish them stook of arms
and munitions. It was very seldom that
the true ohmmeter of those vessels was
learned, and they would return to Madagas-
car with enough powder and guns to supply
the pirates with material for many months
of aggression. They were always careful
not to attack rnen•of•war, but there were
few petoeful vessels that mould withstand
their assaults.
$era the famous Capt. Woods Rogers, a
slaver in the days when slaving was legit-
imate enterprise, found the pirate band
abont the year 17 lo. The outlaws he met
had lived where he found them about a
quarter of a century. It had been long
since they had received any supplies from
Europe. Only eleven of the original stook
remained, but they were surrounded by
children and grandchildren, supported petty
courts, and considerably impressed then.
visitor with the size of their retinues. All
were 000101011 sailors, and not a man in the
outlaw crew could road or write. When
the pirates saw the big ship enter their har-
bor they were at first inspired with terror,
but they soon learned that rho ship was
there simply for the purpose of buying
slaves, and so they ventured aboard, at-
tended like princes. Their stock of Eu-
ropean clothing had long been exhausted and
they were clad in the sic= of wild beasts.
while their feet were destitute of covering,
Isolated as thoy long had been from the
world, they did not betray the slightest in.
terest i0 the news of Europe. They sold
many slaves to Capt. Rogers in oxohangefor
cloth, and in a few days they were all at.
tired once more in ]'.mropean gaalnents,
Their professional inetinot soon asserted it.
self, and they laid plans to seize the vessel.
Tho conspiracy u as discovered through their
efforts to induce Rogers' sailors to join
them. The captain 10005111 he was not
strong enough to risk a fight with the
pirates, and so he ordered all his men to n-
imbi fraiu fr
omY
an intercourse with the shore
and n day or two later he sailed out of the
harbor.
Fruit Notes.
Cutting book in good season stimulates
fruit hearing.
A permanent sod is injurious to most var-
ieties of fruits.
Keep all dead or faulty limbs cut out of
fruit and shade trees.
Deep a close watch on the tent caterpillar
during the summer.
Tho young fruit trees will send up many
starts that will need trimmiug off now.
With grapes, OU 30011130 fait' growth of
woocl and foliage, if the best quality of
fruit is to bo procured.
Ina majority of oases, it is a soriore
mistake to pull oft the leaves of the grape
vines to lot 111 sunlight end air.
Tho care of the lawn should bo a part o f
the work of the garden. Bo careful not to
out too (doao in hot dry weather.
When the tops are dead, the vines are
ready to harvest. Spread out thin so as to
have them euro out thoroughly.
A good plan is to go orer the whole or.
chard every ton lose and out off all sur-
plus branches Os fat as they appear.
If strawberry plants aro to bo sot out in
August, it is a good plan to steep the soil
in a good 111111.timing the early pert of the
summer.
With all 00011ar(10, the treatment must
very fn 411101 nt localities, 00 what will be
best in one kind of soil mould nob be done
to an advantage with another.
AU trimmings from the grape vines and
berry plants should be gathered up and be
burned. In this way many troublesome
ineecte may be destroyed.
Stimulating the grope with animal man•
are makes it grow until late in the fall, Rua
Lhon the wood dons not ripen well and the
fruit bads do not develop well in eons0•
quenco.
Ito growing a strawberry for home mar'
km,, the finest quality should be grown, tet
the variety be what 11 may `, but for ship-
ping, firmness is a very important item,
often more so that the quality.
Late growth produces tender wood,
30111011 cannot survive a very. low 10mper0•
Lure. For this season ogpooially, late cal -
1 Cho
l ,.mat
r and lcorahad t
tlyat[ou In the g
most of small fruits is objeatlop0111o, as it
tends Lo promote a late grovtil.
The matter in all fruits first lemon=
eared) and tion sugar, After the starch
stage has been readied, it will 0llange its
"Ii'm 1" said the stranger, regarding the
young man who palled at the hotel in an.
ewer to the advertisement, " you are an
actor, you say."
" Yes," was the reply ; " the oritles,
hovel
" Oh, I don't care about the critics," re•
turned the portly gentleman, whereat the
young plan nodded approval. " What
parts clo you take 2"
"Juvenile."
" Ell ?—eh 2—children s ?" gasped the
interviewer.
( \Yhy, no," said the applicant, in a sure•
prised tone, " the young lover."
"011, yes, yes," assented the other,
smiling ; "that's just it. Are you open for
0n engagement—I m1510100), several eugago•
meats—for the summer ?"
"I am," was the hearty Rumor.
" At say, $211 1t week and all expenses?"
" \Coll," returned the stage lover, " I
shoeld soy so ? Are—are" the tone ins.
plied mingled :lope and doubt ---"are you a
meager ?"
"I am," said the older beaming. " And
I'll taste you until the first of October. All
that you will have to do is to Oct your reg•
ular part, and you may fill several engage-
ments, I am a summer hotel manager. —
[liarpor's %sane.
Heartless Indeed.
Gown 10)Years 01d.
The oldest dress in the world is probably
that described by a French traveller in Jap•
an. It belonged to a1 Empress in Japan
who lived in the thirteenth century and it
has been kept all these centuries in a tem•
plc near Yokohama, where the priests
sometimes exhibit it for a sufficient reward.
It is kept in an old coffer oovered with
white silk. The robe, of robes, for there
are several of them, are described as a die•
phaneus mess, crumbling at the edges with
decay. The materiel is a crepe, or some
filmy stuff, and tho effect must be like that
worn by Loie Fuller, It is made with a
long train, pagoda sleeves, and a high oollar
like Modiei's ou0'. The upper layer was
once white, and is naw the molar of ivory,
embroidered with flying birds the size of
mows, with dragons' heads green, blue
and violet. Then 001110 several layers of the
silk muslin, yellow, blue, violet, old gold
and green; on which seem scattered strange
animals, all in flight. The seventh, which
touches the body of the long dead empress,
is violet embroidered with figures like
p110ut0010. The embroidery on this won•
derful robe Is said to be as treasperent as
the gauze. The effect of the whole is smoke
colored.
"I thinly our teacher of composition is
charming, don't you, Emily?"
"1 Fie, .Bertha; that heartless monster?
Captivated by his blue eyes the other day,
I slipped a little affectionate note in my
copybook t"
' And whet did 110 do?"
"He gave it me Molt with all the spell•
log mistakes corrected in red ink 1"—
Making a Business of It.
L1 rho Transportation building a woman
W10 svgs lagging ton feet behind her 1100-
b0nti said : 1Here's a box and T'11 going
to set down for a while. Gooduloes 1011 (pa
I'm abort nsod up."
"Rost nothing," said hor husband.
"Do you suppose I paid $10 railroad faro
to come get through this show this ere and stt (w We've
land it'll
keep us morin'.
The woman arose and wearily fell in be.
hind him once more. This manner of "do•
Mg" the Exposition was like plowing a
1)014,
He'd Been Backed.
Iiorsenan—" That is a remarkably fine
animal you aro (iriving,madam0."
Lady-" Oh, 1 wouldn't part with this
horse for the world. lie's just es gentle n0
can be, and real fast too."
13or0enan—" So Ishould judge, Has 110
ever been backed against any noted trot-
ters?„
Lady— Well,, I don't know, but ut seems
to 010 WO book against pretty much every
thing in the 01r88t0 very time I attempt to
tura 'round,"
A Ohioago Inoideut
Gus de Smith, Charlie Kni0korboeker and
Hostetter 1101ltnnis visited tine W'orld's
Fair. While attending one of l.ulolio's re.
captions, Otos 0000.0timulated himself and
had to be taken to his room by his sober
oompanion0.
" I epee six beds goin' rotor' and room',"
sand (;118l.
\\'el, hoop your month e' tit a'rout it,"
said Hostetter llotm11le, "or the labc110rd
will put than all in the bill,"
TEE (If!,111AT SOUTH M '' PO
_--A D
7
ac°Liver Cure.
The Most Astonishing Medical Discovery .of
the Last One Hundred Years.
It is Pleasant to the Taste as the Sweetest Nectar.,
It is Safe and Harmless as the Purest Milk.
This wonderful Norville Tonle has only recently been introduced
•
into this c'ountry 11v the proprietors and manufacturers of the Great
South American Nervine Tonic, and yet its great value as a curative
regent has lung lu'en known by a few of the most leaned physicians,
who have not 11.11u1;ht its merits and value W the knowledge of the -
general public.
This medicine has completely soly,'jthe problem of the cure of indi-
gestion, dyspepsia, and diseased of the general nervous system. It is
also of the greatest \ethic. in the cure of all firms of foiling health from
whatever euu:>e. I1 performs this by the great nervine tonic qualities
30111011 it possesses, and by its great curative powers upon the digestive •
organs, the si(lh1eh, the liver and the bowels. No remedy compare% •
with this wonderfully valuable Nervine Tonic as a builder and strength,
.tact of the life forces of the human body, and as a great renewer of es
broken -dawn constitution, It is also of more real permanent value in
the treatment and clue of diseases of the lungs than any consumption
remedy ever need on this continent. It is a marvelous cure for nerv-,
ousuess of females of all ages. Ladies who are approaching the critical
period known as change in life, should not fail to use this great Nervine
Tonle, almost constantly, 1'"r the space of two or three years, It Will
carry them safely over the danger. This great strengthener and cura-
tive is of inestimable gine to the aged and infirm, because its great
energizing properties will give them a new hold on life. It will add ten
or 11l'teen year.; to the lives of many of those who will use a_half dozen,.
bottles a the remedy each year.
IT IS A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CURE OF
Broken Constitution,
Debility of Old .Age,
Indigestion and Dyspepsia,
Heartburn and Sour Stomach,
Weight and Tenderness in Stomach,
Loss of Appetite,
Frightful Dreams,
Dizziness and Ringing in the Ears,
Weakness of Extremities and
Fainting,
Impure and Impoverished Blood,
Boils and Carbuncles,
Scrofula,
Scrofulous Swellings and Ulcers,
Consumption of' the Lungs,
Catarrh of the Lungs,
Bronchitis and Chronic Cough,
Liver Complaint,
Chronic Diarrhrra,,
Delicate and Scrofulous Children,
Nervousness,
Nervous Prostration,
Nervous Headache,
Sick Headache,
Female Weakness,
Nervous Chills,
Paralysis,
Nervous Paroxysms and
Nervous Choking,
Hot Flashes,
Palpitation of the Heart,
Mental Despondency,
Sleeplessness,
81. Vitus' Dance,
Nervousness of Females,
Nervousness of Old Age,
Neuralgia,
Pains in the Hear
Pains in the Back,
Failing Health,
Summer Complaint of Infants.
All these and many other complaints cured by this wonderful
Norville Tonic.
NE '` VOUS DISEASES.
As a cure for every class of Nervous Diseases, no remedy has been
able to compare with the Nervine Tonic, which is very pleasant and
harmless in all its effects upon the youngest child or the oldest and most
delicate individual. Nine -tenths of all the ailments to which the human
family is heir are dependent on nervous exhaustion and impaired diges-
tion. When there is an insufficient supply cf nerve food in the blood, a
general state of debility of the brain, spinal marrow, and nerves is the
result. Starved nerves, like starved muscles, become strong when the
right kind of food is supplied; and a thousand weaknesses and ailments
disappear as the nerves recover. As the nervous system must supply ail
the power by which the vital forces of the body are carried on, it is the
first to suffer for want of perfect nutrition. Ordinary food does not con,
tain a sufficient quantity of the kind of nutriment necessary to repair.
the wear our present mode of living and labor imposes upon the nerves.
For this reason it becomes necessary that a nerve food bo supplied,
This South American Nervine has been found by analysis to contain the
essential elements out of which nerve tissue is formed. This accounts
for its universal adaptability to the cure of all forms of nervous de- .
rangement.
GRAwrenesv1LLE, INn., Aug. 0.0, '80.
To the Groat South America,. Medicine Co.:
• •
00.00 GENT,.
:—I desire to tln to 3 you that I
kavas of the formany years with a 1 Very serious
medicine
of the stomach and net vas. 70 done
ed every
anti appreeablo good of, but
tInWas1 advised to
try your Great South American Nervit30 Toole
and Stomach and Liver Cure, and since using
several bottles of it 1 must say that I am sur-
prised at Its wonderful pacers to cure thestom-
arit and general nervous -system. if everyone
knew the value of this remedy as 1 do you would
uc the able to supply the demand.
3, A. 3Amn00, Ex-Treas. tiomtemmery Co.
RRRscrA wmx0000)1, of nroweooallcy, Ind,.
says : " 1 had been in a distressed couditioa tow
three years from NCI`y011enC80 Weakness Caknees or the
Stomach, Dyspepsia, and Indigestion, until my
health was gond. I had been doctoring 000.
Stoutly. with no relief. I bought ono bottle 09,
South American Nervine, which done ale more
good Dian any 110 worth of doctoring I ever
,11d in my life. I 3(0030 advise every weakly per,
son to use this valuable and lovely remedy ; ac
new bottles of 1t has cured me completely..I
consider It the grandest medicine is the world.'tl
A SWORN CURE FOR ST. VITAS' DANCE UR CHOREA..
• CEiAWFORDSVII.Lp1, INI7,, June 22, 1887.
My daughter, eleven years old, was severely afflicted with St. Vitus' Dance
or Chorea. We gave her three and one-half bottles of South American Nero
vine and she is completely restored. I believe it will cure every case of St,
Vitus' Dance. I have kept it in my family for two years, and am sure it is
•
the greatest remedy in the world for Indigestion and Dyspepsia, and for all
forms of Nervous Disorders and Failing Health, from whatever cause.
JOIi.T T. Mxsa1G
State of Indiana, ;
Montgomery County,} 00
Subscribed and sworn to before me this Stine 23, 1887.
413As, W. WRIGHT, Notary Public,
IN rl GESTI N AND DYSPEPSIA.
The Great South American Nervine Tonic
Which we now offer you, is the only absolutely unfailing remedy oyez
discovered for the cure of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, and the vast train or
symptoms and horrors which are the result of disease and debility of
the human stomach. No person can afford to pass by this jewel of inial,
oulablo value who is affected by disease of the stomach, because the ex-
perience and testimony of many go to prove that this is the mix and
oELY 01(10 great euro in tho world for this universal destroyer. There'
•
is no ease of unmalignant disease of idle stomach which can resist the
wonderful curative powers of the South American Nch'vine Tonic.
tLunnlaT D. 1001.1,, nt Wayert0wn, Tod., says: I lune. PIMA A. ilooTtes, of New nnas, Indiana,
" 1 owe m3' life to the (Treat Son1.h Amerlea0 80,3'0; "I cannot ()Norms how meth I owe to the
Herrin°. I had been In hod for ave months from Ne,'vin0 Tonle. ill,\ s3•strm was rnmplrlrly shat,.
the effects of an exhausted atmoneb, lndigesttnu, •nu 'bin and pilot
Nervmla',restratin% and n, general shattered I tared, appetite gone, wma ( g g spitting
condition of ray whole systole. lied ;;(van up, a blond: am Bare T was in the drat etngee.
all hopes of getting well. Gad tried three dna of 000011npti10. an inheritance handed (town
terse wall no repr, miler. Tho first bottle of the Nolhron, h several sweat-mite,.1. began taking
Inc oniehnp000011 mean 8(1)01 that 1 was nblet0 the Nervine Tonic, anti mini:mad its Ilse for
walk about, anti 0 few ;mince cured me entirely. 1 about six months, and tun entirely cured, It
I believe it Is the best nuanced. fin the World. I ( is the mandrel. remedy,tor nerves, stomach and
Ian not reennnnove
ead it :too highly. lungs I have r even. •.
No•rennal v e oloparei With 0011011 Angolan 5E10710n as a 0311.0 eerily, Nevem, No eemety 1003,
pares with South A100(10,1,1 Norviuo 001. wondrous cure for the Stotnerh. No remedy will at all
v,altnare 1,1111 South American dr00i10' tie a 011re far all forma of inning health. It never tails t0
eine Indigestion and Dy0pepoin 1t. never frits to.'1 00 Charm or St \ ttos' nears, Inc powers tc.
h+111d up tine 01)111,' system an wonderful in the extreme. It steres the nil, (.fin young, and the
dle aged. Tt to n great friend to the aged and =rm. no not neglect 1.0 air this preel0us boon::
11 yell do, you 01&y neglect. 111e Only Comedy Which will metnrn 3'(1n t, to llll, Sand American
Neroiuo la perh,'tly not,'., and ',cry pleasnut to the taste. Delicate ladies do net fail tons%this
great ('ore, because it 1\111 pmt it bloom ,nm of frorlm.'ns (mut beauty Upon 3 u'tt' lips and to year eheeksl_
Mid quickly 41.11.,' ;Wray you; disubilt tie( and weaknesses.
Large
le • tt k 11 w
EVERY BOTTLE LEE `NARRANTD.
A. 'MAD 11iAN, Wholesale and Retail Agent for Hew sels.